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Haliburton subsidiary is allocated another $7 BILLION in April, 2003.

Make No Mistake

Make no mistake. Bush makes no mistakes. He executes the Master Plan to perfection. His kleptocracy is an egregious success. Americans continue to swallow Bush's hooks, lines, and sinkers. Who else could make nylon and lead appear so deliciously appetizing? Where's the beef? No beef, just BS. As Bush keeps coming up with more fecal material, Americans just slurp it up and ask for more. What a show. It's absolutely delightful to watch. What utter imbeciles.

More twaddle from the twit. Too little too late.
It seems Gore just doesn't get it.Gore said Wednesday, November 20, that President Bush, "is making serious mistakes in the war on terrorism and called his economic plan a catastrophic failure. That gives Democrats an excellent chance to win the White House in 2004, whoever their nominee is." Yeah, right. Dream on Al, you twit.

But guess what jelly bean? Les jeux sont faits. There's nothing to be done. It's too late. Ya gotta love it!


"Those who can make you believe absurdities
can make you commit atrocities."
"The rich require an abundance of the poor." --

"We need a common enemy to unite us." ~ Condoleeza Rice, March 2000

"Our government has kept us in a perpetual state of fear-kept us in a continuous stampede of patriotic fervor-with the cry of grave national emergency. Always there has been some terrible evil at home or some monstrous foreign power that was going to gobble us up if we did not blindly rally behind it ..." ~ General Douglas MacArthur, 1957

"The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to the point where it becomes stronger than the democratic state itself. That in its essence is fascism ...ownership of government by an individual, by a group or any controlling private power." President Franklin D. Roosevelt

Freedom, democracy, freewill? Beautiful Mirages.
"Towards the end of his epic novel, War and Peace, published as the United States was embroiled in its Civil War, Count Leo Tolstoy spoke of power, the forces of human will, of necessity, nature, and the repeating patterns of our world. In the last three pages of his novel, Tolstoy has little problem with these greater ideas as he steps to a higher level of human perception. He tells us that as Copernicus and Galileo destroyed the cosmology of the ancients who placed earth at the center of the universe, we must once again shift our conceptual universe. Tolstoy tells us that"...by admitting our free will we arrive at an absurdity, while admitting our dependence on the external world, on time, on cause, we arrive at laws." Common sense suggests that we should always be active in addressing our absurdities—and now is a particularly prudent time to do so. Good intellectual practice, some of it science, but most of it common sense, gives us far more than the means to avoid absurdity. It can let us build an effective world view for addressing the full diversity of conditions before us. Four factors are currently at work shaping the ways we confront the realities and the absurdities of our future."
The Epistemological Revolution:
dieoff.org/page139.htm


outragedcomics.com/

nietzsche

I'd rather be fishing

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